Monarchs could distribute land for political purposes, fragmenting a noble's holdings or distancing him from the court. The system was often weighted in favour of the sovereign as when a noble died without an heir, his estate went back to the monarch to either keep for themselves or to redistribute to another noble. As fiefs were often hereditary, a permanent class divide was established between those who had land and those who rented it. The consequence of the feudal system was the creation of very localised groups of communities which owed loyalty to a specific local lord who exercised absolute authority in his domain. Rather, the relationship between serf and landowner or tenant is referred to as the manorial system after the most common unit of land, the 'manor'. The term feudalism, however, is generally applied by modern historians only to the relationship between lords and vassals, and not the peasantry.
They were often treated as little more than slaves and could not leave the estate on which they lived and worked. The peasantry worked, without pay, on the land owned or rented by others to produce food for themselves and, just as importantly, food and profit for their masters. Unfree labourers were serfs, also known as villeins, who were at the bottom of the social pyramid and who made up the vast majority of the population.
The end of feudalism in the middle ages free#
Thus there was a perpetual divide between the landed aristocracy (monarchs, lords, and some tenants) and those who worked the land for them who could be free or unfree labourers. The feudal system perpetuated itself as a status quo because the control of land required the ability to perform military service and, because of the costs involved (of weapons, armour and horses), land was required to fund military service. The feudal system perpetuated itself as a status quo because the control of land required the ability to perform military service & land was required to fund military service.